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The Perichoresis of Light

Theology and Science, 2012
Abstract We argue that light, as it is described in physics (quantum mechanics and special relativity), embodies the mystery of perichoresis. This is to propose that physics offers helpful metaphors in grasping perichoresis. Our major theological point is that light expresses the perichoretic union of God and humankind. We acknowledge that perichoresis
David Grandy, Marc-Charles Ingerson
exaly   +2 more sources

Unions by perichoresis and activity

2023
Abstract This chapter examines two highly original Christologies that are peculiar to the theologians who proposed them. First, the view of the Dominican William Crathorn, reported by Robert Holcot, that the Incarnation consists in the perichoresis of the divine person in the human nature.
exaly   +2 more sources

Trinity, Perichoresis, and Christian Marriage: Thinking, Feeling, and Acting Like the Trinity

Journal of Psychology and Theology, 2023
This article proposes two new applications of the concept of perichoresis for husband–wife relations in Christian marriage. These new applications, derived from the concept of perichoresis and the doctrine of Trinity, develop the ideas of I-Thou-We (ITW) consciousness—“Thinking and feeling in unity like the Trinity”—and of inseparable operations ...
John Jefferson Davis
exaly   +2 more sources

Perichoresis and Projection: Problems with Social Doctrines of the Trinity

New Blackfriars, 2000
Over the last three decades there has been a great outpouring of writings from both Catholic and Protestant theologians on the doctrine of the Trinity, almost all of which, ironically, have lamented the neglect of the doctrine. Again and again one reads that although the Trinity is central and crucially important to Christianity and Christian theology,
Karen Kilby
exaly   +2 more sources

Perichoresis and the Faith That Personalizes

Ephemerides Theologicae Lovanienses, 1986
exaly   +2 more sources

The Perichoresis of the Trinity

Philosophy and Theology, 2020
According to John Hare, a “moral gap” exists between the authority of a moral demand and our inability to do the moral demand. Only the authority of the moral demander can bridge the gap, but that requires the demander experience the obligations of the demand. Christian ethics has a way to explain how to bridge of the gap.
openaire   +1 more source

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